Daniel M Alligood1, Daniel Albo2, Steffen E Meiler3, Sarah Mi Cartwright3, Allen Kelly4, Hongyan Xu5, Muhammad Saeed2. 1. Medical College of Georgia, Department of Surgery, Augusta GA. Electronic address: dalligood@augusta.edu. 2. Department of Surgery, Augusta University Medical Center, Augusta GA. 3. Department of Anesthesiology, Augusta University Medical Center, Augusta GA. 4. Perioperative Services, Augusta University Medical Center, Augusta GA. 5. Department of Biostatistics, Augusta University, Augusta GA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) is a program designed to measure and improve surgical care quality. In 2015, the study institution formed a multidisciplinary team to address the poor adult postoperative pneumonia performance (worst decile). STUDY DESIGN: The study institution is a 450+-bed tertiary care center which performs 12,000+ surgical procedures annually. From January 2016 to December 2019, the institution abstracted surgical cases and assigned postoperative pneumonia as a complication per the NSQIP operations manual. Using a plan-do-study-act approach, a multidisciplinary postoperative pneumonia prevention team implemented initiatives regarding incentive spirometry education, anesthetic optimization, early mobility, and oral care. The team measured the initiatives' success by analyzing semiannual reports (SAR) provided by the ACS NSQIP and regional adjusted percentile rankings provided by the Georgia Surgical Quality Collaborative (GSQC). RESULTS: The 2015 SAR postoperative pneumonia rate was 4.20% (odds ratio 3.86, confidence interval 2.92-5.11). After project initiation, the postoperative pneumonia rates decreased for all NSQIP cases from 2.51% (OR 2.67, CI 1.89-3.77) in 2016 to 2.08% (OR 2.61, CI 1.82-3.74) in 2017, to 0.85% (OR 1.10, CI 0.69-1.75) in 2018, and then increased slightly to 1.14% (OR 1.27, CI 0.84-1.92) in 2019. The institution's adjusted percentile regional rank of participating regional ACS NSQIP hospitals' postoperative pneumonia rate improved from 14/14 (July 2015-June 2016) to 6/14 (July 2018-June 2019). CONCLUSION: The multidisciplinary postoperative pneumonia prevention team successfully decreased the postoperative pneumonia rate, thus improving surgical patient's outcomes. Furthermore, this quality improvement project also saved valuable revenue for the hospital.
BACKGROUND: The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) is a program designed to measure and improve surgical care quality. In 2015, the study institution formed a multidisciplinary team to address the poor adult postoperative pneumonia performance (worst decile). STUDY DESIGN: The study institution is a 450+-bed tertiary care center which performs 12,000+ surgical procedures annually. From January 2016 to December 2019, the institution abstracted surgical cases and assigned postoperative pneumonia as a complication per the NSQIP operations manual. Using a plan-do-study-act approach, a multidisciplinary postoperative pneumonia prevention team implemented initiatives regarding incentive spirometry education, anesthetic optimization, early mobility, and oral care. The team measured the initiatives' success by analyzing semiannual reports (SAR) provided by the ACS NSQIP and regional adjusted percentile rankings provided by the Georgia Surgical Quality Collaborative (GSQC). RESULTS: The 2015 SAR postoperative pneumonia rate was 4.20% (odds ratio 3.86, confidence interval 2.92-5.11). After project initiation, the postoperative pneumonia rates decreased for all NSQIP cases from 2.51% (OR 2.67, CI 1.89-3.77) in 2016 to 2.08% (OR 2.61, CI 1.82-3.74) in 2017, to 0.85% (OR 1.10, CI 0.69-1.75) in 2018, and then increased slightly to 1.14% (OR 1.27, CI 0.84-1.92) in 2019. The institution's adjusted percentile regional rank of participating regional ACS NSQIP hospitals' postoperative pneumonia rate improved from 14/14 (July 2015-June 2016) to 6/14 (July 2018-June 2019). CONCLUSION: The multidisciplinary postoperative pneumonia prevention team successfully decreased the postoperative pneumonia rate, thus improving surgical patient's outcomes. Furthermore, this quality improvement project also saved valuable revenue for the hospital.